00:00On this day in space.
00:04On May 9, 2003, the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency launched the first ever asteroid sample
00:09return mission, Hayabusa.
00:11This was also the first mission to land on an asteroid.
00:14Hayabusa would spend about two years chasing down a near-Earth asteroid called 25143 Itokawa.
00:20It then landed on the asteroid, scooped up some samples, and returned to Earth in 2010.
00:24Hayabusa may have accomplished its mission, but it was also constantly plagued with technical
00:28difficulties.
00:30The problem started six months after the launch, when a huge solar flare damaged the solar arrays.
00:35This reduced the amount of power that the solar panels could supply to its ion engines, so
00:39it took an extra three months to reach the asteroid.
00:42After finally getting there, Hayabusa tried to drop off a tiny robotic lander called Minerva,
00:47but it drifted off into space without even touching the asteroid.
00:50Hayabusa itself made two separate landing attempts, both of which were riddled with problems that
00:55put the spacecraft into safe mode.
00:57But somehow it still managed to bring some asteroid dust back to Earth.
01:01And that's what happened on this day in space.
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